1 / 57

Calcaneal Fractures

Calcaneal Fractures. Sulaiman A. Almousa PGY3. Introduction. The most frequently injured tarsal bone 1–2% of all fractures 75% of foot fractures 25% Extra-articular 75% Intra-articular. Introduction. The management continue to be topics for debate.

Télécharger la présentation

Calcaneal Fractures

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Calcaneal Fractures Sulaiman A. Almousa PGY3

  2. Introduction • The most frequently injured tarsal bone • 1–2% of all fractures • 75% of foot fractures • 25% Extra-articular • 75% Intra-articular

  3. Introduction • The management continue to be topics for debate. • The irregular anatomy of the calcaneus • The delicate soft tissue envelope have made operative treatment a challenging task to orthopedic surgeon. • Considerable socio-economic impact since it usually occur in young and middle-aged male industrial workers.

  4. Anatomy

  5. Anatomy

  6. Anatomy • a cortical shell of varying thickness (thin at the lateral wall) • trabecular cancellous bone reflects : • the axial compression forces (body weight ) • The tensile forces generated by tendinous and fascial insertions. • the trabeculae are condensed beneath the posterior facet (thalamic portion). • (neutral triangle) is prone to impaction • sustentaculum tali:connected to the talus via strong medial and lateral talocalcaneal ligaments. • Within the sinus tarsi lies the talocalcaneal interosseous ligament

  7. Anatomy Normal values: Bohler=25-40 deg Gissane=100 deg

  8. Calcaneal Function • Body weight baring • lever arm to increase the power of the gastrosoleus mechanism. • Structural support for the maintenance of normal lateral column length

  9. Mechanism of Injury • High-energy axial load • Fall from a height • MVC • Fracture pattern depends on: • The direction and amount of force applied • The position of the foot at the time of impact • Bone quality

  10. Pathomechanics • The vertical load axis of the talus lies medially to that of the calcaneus • Eccentrically directed vertical axial force results in the primary frature line. • results in two main fragments: • superomedial (sustentacular) • posterolateral (tuberosity and body) • With the hindfoot in : • Eversion the fracture line runs laterally creating a large superomedial fragment • Inversion the fracture line lies more medially producing isolated fractures of the sustentaculum.

  11. Pathomechanics • If the energy is not completely expended • A secondary fracture lines develop at the posterior aspect of the subtalar joint. • If marginally involving the tuberosity will results in a joint depression type fractures • If extends longitudinally into the tuberosity results in In tongue type fractures

  12. Pathomechanics • Variable tertiary fracture lines may extend anteriorly into the calcaneocuboid joint forming an anterolateral fragment

  13. Radiography • lateral x-ray of the hindfoot: • Height of the posterior facet • Decrease in the angle of Böhler • Increase in the angle of Gissane • Double density : • If only the lateral half of the posterior facet is fractured

  14. Radiography • AP x-ray of the foot • Extension of the fracture line into the calcaneocuboid joint

  15. Radiography • Harris axial x-ray of the heel • subtalar joint surface • loss of height • increase in width • angulation of the tuberosity fragment

  16. Radiography • Brodén’s view : • articular surface of the posterior facet • patient supine • The x-ray cassette under the ankle. • The foot is in neutral flexion, and the leg is internally rotated 30 to 40 degrees • The x-ray beam then is centered over the lateral malleolus • four x-rays are made with the tube angled 40, 30, 20, and 10 degrees toward the head of the patient • the 10-degree view shows the posterior portion of the facet, • the 40-degree view shows the anterior portion.

  17. Radiography • Associated injuries: • Bilateral fractures in 5-9% • Spine fracture 10% • Other lower limb injuries 26% • Compartment syndrome up to 10%. • Spine • Other side foot xray • Ankle • Tibial plafond

  18. CT scan • Transverse Plane

  19. CT scan • Semicoronal Plane

  20. Classification

  21. Classification • Essex-Lopresti 1952 described 2 types • Tongue • Joint depression (more common)

  22. Classification Sanders Classification: • CT based • Based on the number and location of articular fracture fragments on coronal CT scans. • Type I Non-displaced fracture). • Type II Two parts fracture of the posterior facet. • Type III Three parts fracture • Type IV Four (or more) parts fracture

  23. Classification • Sub-type: • A: lateral • B: central • C: medial

  24. Classification

  25. Classification

  26. History • Mechanism of injury • Other injuries • Associated injuries • Bilateral fractures in 5-9% • Spine fracture 10% • Other lower limb injuries 26% • Compartment syndrome up to 10%. • Pain is usually severe ( bleeding into a tightly enveloped fascia of the heel)

  27. Clinical Examination • Inspection: • soft-tissue disruption • proportional to the force generated to produce the injury. • low-energy minimum swelling and ecchymosis • high-energy Severe softtissue disruption /open fractures. • Skin creases have disappeared • Blisters • Cleavage at the dermal-epidermal junction

  28. Clinical Examination • The heel is tender to palpation. The patients • Palpation of the lateral malleolus peroneal tendons have dislocated. • Unable to fully to pronate and supinate the foot. • lateral bulging and valgus deformity of the hindfoot • Compartment syndrome of the foot has to be ruled out.

  29. Calcaneal fractures • Extraarticular 25% • Intraarticular 75%

  30. Extra-articular fractures • 25% of all calcaneus fractures • Lower energy/simple injuries • usually affect • the anterior process • The tuberosity • the body of the calcaneum • the sustentaculumtali • Treated conservatively

  31. Anterior process fractures • two types : • avulsion of the bifurcate ligament. • affecting the upper and lateral part of the Anterior process • Conservative treatment • intra-articular fracture affecting the calcaneocuboid joint • eversion in dorsiflexion • Associated with intra-articular fractures of the subtalar joint

  32. Anterior process fractures • Best seen on oblique view • Below knee walking cast • WBAT 4-6 weeks • Consider ORIF if >25% articular surface

  33. Fractures of the body • Body Fracture • posterior and inferior parts of the body lying behind the posterior facet • conservatively treated • NWB or TTWB for 4-6 weeks • ORIF for loss of height or heel widening

  34. Fractures of the tuberosity • Avulsion of the tendo Achilles or direct blow • Positive Thompson test • equinus BKC • CRPP or screw if fx displace • Plantar flexion and bone tenaculum • 7.3mm cannulated screw • 6-8 weeks casting in equinus

  35. Intra-articular fractures • 75% • Operative vs. non-operative

  36. Non-operative treatment • Indications: • non-displaced fractures (Sanders type I) Sanders R (1992)J Orthop Trauma Sanders R, (1993) Clin Orthop • patients with severe PVD/ IDDM • Medical co-morbidities prohibiting surgery • elderly patients who are minimal ambulators • Chronological age itself is not a contraindication to surgical treatment • fractures with large open wounds

  37. Non-operative treatment • Initial splint immobilization to allow dissipation of the acute fracture hematoma • Elastic compression stocking to lessen dependent edema • Fracture boot locked in neutral flexion to prevent an equinus contracture. • Early range of motion exercises • Weight bearing is not allowed for 10–12 weeks until radiographic union

  38. Operative Treatment • Indications: • Displaced intra-articular fractures involving the posterior facet. • The primary goal of surgery: • anatomic restoration of alignment • return of function without pain.

  39. Timing of surgery • Should be performed within the first three weeks before fracture consolidation • However, Surgery must be delayed until the associated soft tissue swelling markedly decreased. • to reduce edema: • Splinting • Elevation • Jones dressing • Elastic compression stocking • Fracture boot locked in neutral flexion • foot pump

  40. Timing of surgery • Positive wrinkle test • The patient dorsiflexes and everts the foot. • If skin-wrinkling is seen and no pitting edema is evident operative intervention may be undertaken.

  41. Closed reduction/percutaneous pining • Essex-Lopresti technique • Tongue type (Sanders type IIC) • Prone position • Two teminally-threaded 3.2 mm guide pins • The reduction is then performed according to the method of Tornetta

  42. ORIF • Goals • Reduction/fixation of posterior facet • Correct loss of height/increased width • Fix calcaneocuboid, ant/mid facet fx’s

  43. Patient positioning • lateral decubitus /prone position • Translucent table • Tourniquet • Flex the operative limb at the knee • Extended the non-operative limb • an operating “platform” is created with blankets and foam padding to elevate the operative limb

  44. Approach • 2 cm proximal to the tip of the lateral malleolus lateral to the Achilles tendon • Junction of the skin of the lateral foot and heel pad • A full-thickness, subperiosteal flap • The calcaneofibular ligament is sharply released from the lateral calcaneal wall • The peroneal tendons are released from the peroneal tubercle • K-wires are placed for retraction of the flap into the fibula and the talar neck and the cuboid

  45. Reduction • Identify the fracture line • Mobilize the lateral wall fragment • Elevate the articular fragment • A periosteal elevator is into the primary fracture line to disimpact the tuberosity fragment from the sustentacular fragment, and restore calcaneal height • A 4.5 mm Schantz pin in the calcaneal tuberosity • manipulat using a longitudinal traction/medial translation/valgus angulation

  46. Medial approach • No control over the posterior facet • simple two-part • extra-articular fractures • Medial wall blow out. • Horizontal incision half way between the tip of the M.M. and the sole. • The neurovascular bundle is carefully retracted. • The abductor hallucis longus muscle is retracted downward • 25% incidence of damage to the calcaneal branch of the posterior tibial nerve Paley and Hall JBJS Am 1993

  47. Sustentacular approach • isolated sustentacular fractures • To supplement the extended lateral approach in complex fractures pattern • 3—5 cm horizontal incision directly over the sustentaculum

  48. 20 fresh frozen amputated human legs • impacted by a 20 kg weight dropped from a 155 cm height • Group 1: a lateral buttress plate and parallel screws in latero-medial direction • Group 2: a longitudinal screw was added • Applying load until the internal fixation failed.

  49. Post-operative protocol • Below knee NWB cast • sutures removed in 3 weeks • elastic compression stocking and fracture boot at 3 weeks • early range-of-motion exercises • progressive weightbearing at 10–12 weeks

  50. ORIF/primary arthrodesis • Highly comminuted intra-articular (Sanderstype IV) fractures • in the event of: • poor intra-articular reduction • severe cartilage delamination • absence of a substantial portion of the joint surface, • Extensile lateral approach re-establish calcaneal length, alignment • Remove the articular cartilage drill the subchondral surfaces of both talus and calcaneus • Supplemental cancellous autograft or allograft • Two large cannulated screws placed from posterior to anterior in diverging fashion perpendicular to the plane of the posterior facet

More Related